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Airalo review: how to beat mobile roaming charges abroad using travel eSIMs

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Last year, almost all UK mobile networks brought back international roaming charges for all destinations, including those in the EU.

This was a major disappointment, as free European roaming was unbelievably convenient for frequent travellers.

Anyone on EE, Three or Vodafone will now be charged for EU roaming when they take out a new mobile contract (existing contracts are usually exempt from EU roaming costs, so it may be worth sticking with that you have even if slightly cheaper deals are available).

For example, Three will now charge you £2 a day just to use your normal allowance in Europe. Outside of Europe it can be as much as £5 per day.

Airalo review

For EU roaming, O2 remains the best UK mobile network

O2 is now the only mobile network of the big four to include free roaming in Europe for all pay monthly customers. It’s one of the reasons I swapped from Three once my contract ended last month.

(Vodafone also offers free roaming on some of its 4 Xtra plans, starting at £18/month.)

48 countries/territories/areas are included. The full list is on the O2 website here but basically it covers all of the EU and European Economic Area. Switzerland, for example, is included, as is Norway, despite neither being part of the EU.

Calls and texts to UK numbers are also free or charged at the same rate as they would be if you were in the UK. Calls to international numbers are separate – although O2 offers an paid-for ‘International Bolt On’ that reduces the cost of these too.

If you are on a monthly plan, you can use your data in O2’s Eurozone up to a maximum of 25GB (or less, if your plan includes fewer GBs.) Any data usage beyond this will be subject to throttling.

sim card

Finding local eSIMs with Airalo

If you’re travelling beyond the European Union, or you’re with EE, Vodafone, Three or another network, then your best option is purchasing a local SIM card at your destination.

This has been made even easier with the introduction of eSIM across many mobile devices, including from 12th generation iPhones (the 2018 iPhone XR and XS). Samsung was a bit behind the curve and only introduced eSIMs to its 2020 Galaxy S20 phones but too are now standard.

Most handsets from the last 2-5 years come with dual SIM support, either in the form of two SIM card slots or a physical SIM slot and eSIM support.

That means you can now connect to two mobile networks at once – letting you retain your UK number and SIM whilst supplementing it with a local SIM depending on where you’re travelling.

eSIMs make this even easier because you don’t need to wait until you arrive at the airport or faff around with tiny SIM cards. You can simply scan a QR code to add a data plan to your phone.

This has led to a number of third party companies popping up to connect travellers with local SIM cards, including Airalo.

Using Airalo as an esim to beat roaming charges

Airalo – website here – bills itself as the world’s first eSIM store that gives you access to 190+ eSIMs globally, including a range of local, regional and global SIM cards.

I have now used Airalo twice – on my trips to Malaysia and Qatar – and have been very impressed. The process is extremely simple, as demonstrated by this infographic:

How Airalo works

(In reality, you do not need the app. You can also use the web interface.)

What I particularly like about Airalo and eSIMs is that I can install my international data plan before I even leave the UK, which means I have a seamless data connection once I land at my destination. This is especially useful in case I need to show any documents on my phone but can’t connect to Wi-Fi.

How does Airalo work?

In a few weeks I am heading to the United States to try out Virgin Atlantic’s new Austin route, which is unfortunately outside of my O2 free roaming destinations. Looking at Airalo, I have four options:

  • 1GB with 7 days validity for $4.50
  • 3GB with 30 days validity for $11
  • 5GB for 30 days validity for $16
  • 10GB for 30 days validity for $26

In my experience, 1GB is enough data for a few days for basics such as mapping tools, email and browsing online – you’ll need more if you plan on streaming, obviously.

Airalo doesn’t actually manage the eSIM, it just connects you to the mobile network. In this case it’s a provider called ‘Change’ which piggy backs on both T-Mobile and AT&T’s 4G networks – two of the three major US carriers.

Once you purchase an eSIM on Airalo all you have to do is add it to your phone. Apple makes this very easy on iPhones – all you have to do is scan a QR code and enter a few settings and you’ll have local 4G data within 30 seconds or so.

After you fly home it’s just as easy to remove, by going into your settings and removing the data plan.

If you want to try Airalo, then you can use my referral code ‘RHYS4258’ when you sign up or at checkout to get $3 off. I’ll also get $3 off my next plan – thank you. The Airalo site is here.

Comments (169)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Susie says:

    I first used Airalo for the first time in South Africa in Jan/Feb when I was away for 5 weeks.

    The initial setting up took a little time but this was my first experience of using an E-SIM and did it all at home and activated the SIM before leaving the UK so that immediately upon landing in Cape Town I had an active local SIM. I was able to top up with no issues after 30 days.

    The prices are a little higher than buying a SIM on landing at the airport but this is negated for me by the convenience of setting it up before your trip and keeping your UK SIM still in your phone (so I could still use FaceTime and WhatsApp etc with my UK number).

    I can’t recommend it enough and have just bought another eSIM for my trip tomorrow.

    • Simon says:

      How does that work with Whatsapp? Surely if your UK number is still active (and that is what you are using for whatsapp) then you need to have data roaming for it?

  • Frank Bongo says:

    Even though I have o2 with USA roaming, I find the data incredible slows, so used Airalo there recently to speed up the data connection. All worked lovely.

  • CheshirePete says:

    Just for clarity and impartiality as I am a Vodafone customer on an original plan with their Roaming Plus which still offers 81 destinations including beyond the EU, including USA, Australia etc….

    • dougzz99 says:

      That’s a good deal. I have a work Vodafone and that roaming package is not available to business contracts. I use Airalo as despite work paying I hate the idea of paying Vodafone £5/day for a bit of data that I’d typically use.

  • Paul says:

    I am with three and won’t be changing my contract as it still includes “go roam” apparently!
    I am going to Qatar in July so will try this.

    • southlondonphil says:

      There are reports that if you don’t choos a new long-term plan when your current one is up Three will automatically moving people onto new ‘rolling’ 1-month contracts so you still lose the Go Roam benefit anyway.

    • MD says:

      They will force you off that eventually Paul, unfortunately. Not sure how long your contact lasts, but mine had long expired and my rolling one month SIM only plan still included roaming. Then recently they “enhanced” everybody who wasn’t on a recently signed contract to force them onto a new version without roaming. It was actually more expensive as well, for the same plan, so a no brainer to leave them. I moved to O2 and the reception is infinitely better.

  • Aron says:

    Smarty (Three) also has EU roaming included, up to 12GB data each month.

  • David says:

    Don’t think it has been mentioned (apologies if I missed) but with 02 you also get extended roaming free (USA) if you have virgin media and link the two . Volt.

  • josh says:

    I just used RedTea on a trip to Turkey. It was simple to use and inexpensive.I had 1G for 30 days for just five dollars. I think it is a good alternative to check versus Airalo which i also used in the past

  • Malachie says:

    Do any Airalo users have any experience of the Global eSim (87 countries, 1GB for $9) or the Regional ones (e.g Asia Unicorn, Unlimited for 12 days for $18).

    Do they work as well as the ones for individual countries?

    • Rhys says:

      Don’t see why not. They’re all reliant on contracting with the same cell tower providers so it probably comes out in the wash. It’s like comparing Vodafone vs O2 vs Three – all have their strengths but fundamentally they all have 99% 4G coverage.

      • Definitas says:

        That is an estimate based on clever but disingenuous marketing. The UK government relied on poorly informed civil servants to negotiate the conditions of bandwidth sale and were hopelessly outmanoeuvred by the phone companies. As a result of their lack of technical knowledge, Coverage in the UK is measured by the percentage of population covered rather than geographic coverage, which is why the UK has such woeful “black spots”.

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